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  2. Shares outstanding - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shares_outstanding

    They are distinguished from treasury shares, which are shares held by the corporation itself, thus representing no exercisable rights. Shares outstanding and treasury shares together amount to the number of issued shares. Shares outstanding can be calculated as either basic or fully diluted. The basic count is the current number of shares.

  3. Treasury stock - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Treasury_stock

    In an efficient market, a company buying back its stock should have no effect on its price per share valuation. [citation needed] If the market fairly prices a company's shares at $50/share, and the company buys back 100 shares for $5,000, it now has $5,000 less cash but there are 100 fewer shares outstanding; the net effect should be that the underlying value of each share is unchanged.

  4. Issued shares - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Issued_shares

    Issued shares are those shares which the board of directors and/or shareholders have agreed to issue, and which have been issued. Issued shares are the sum of outstanding shares held by shareholders; and treasury shares are shares which had been issued but have been repurchased by the corporation. The latter generally have no voting rights or ...

  5. Restricted stock - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Restricted_stock

    Restricted stock is generally incorporated into the equity valuation of a company by counting the restricted stock awards as shares that are issued and outstanding. This approach does not reflect the fact that restricted stock has a lower value than unrestricted stock due to the vesting conditions attached to it, and therefore the market ...

  6. Asian shares weaken, dollar rises on U.S. Treasury sell-off

    www.aol.com/news/asian-shares-fall-long-dated...

    SYDNEY/LONDON (Reuters) -Asian shares dropped on Friday as a lack of details on Chinese stimulus disappointed investors, while the dollar was buoyed by the biggest weekly rise in longer-dated ...

  7. Public float - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Public_float

    The float is calculated by subtracting the locked-in shares from outstanding shares. For example, a company may have 10 million outstanding shares, with 3 million of them in a locked-in position; this company's float would be 7 million (multiplied by the share price). Stocks with smaller floats tend to be more volatile than those with larger ...

  8. Suze Orman: Why Everyone Should Buy Treasuries - AOL

    www.aol.com/suze-orman-why-everyone-buy...

    Meanwhile, Treasury bonds — T-bonds — are long-term debt obligations that mature in terms of 20 or 30 years. As Fidelity noted, here, the interest rate is fixed for the bond’s entire term.

  9. What is a Treasury bond? - AOL

    www.aol.com/finance/treasury-bond-215931993.html

    Treasury bonds are widely considered a risk-free investment because the U.S. government has never defaulted on its debt. However, investors should understand that even U.S. government bonds have ...